ODDS AND ENDS. 



THE DELINEATOR 



The June Delineator covers many varied 

 interests of the home. It shows the latest 

 styles for Ladies, Misses, Girls and Little 

 Folks, several pages being illustrated in 

 colors so as to give a correct idea of color 

 combinations. The ever practical dress- 

 making article describes the construction 

 of the new Di Vernon waist. Summer time 

 comes it: for its share of attention by spe- 

 cial articles being devoted to material for 

 cycling skirts, to summer dress fabrics and 

 to a number of new and pretty surf habits 

 or bathing stits. Summer Millinery is also 

 illustrated in colors. The problems of 

 Moving Day and after are dealt with very 

 thoroughly by Margaret Hall and the eti- 

 quette required on the part of those who 

 have moved into a new neighborhood is 

 indicated by Mrs. Frank Learned in her 

 Social Observances Department. Pastimes 

 for Children, all sorts of fancy needlework 

 for summer hours, indoor decorations and 

 other varied interests corns in for attention. 

 The wonderful benefactions of Baroness 

 Clara De Hirsch, who a : ded her husband 

 in giving away $100,000,000, are described 

 and illustrated by Sara K. Bolton. The 

 short stories of the minth are by Elmore 

 Elliott Peake and William McLeod Kaine. 

 A collection of antique silver is described 

 in a special article devoted to the subject 

 by N. Hudson Moore. The illustrated 

 Cookery dealj with birthday parties and is 

 very beautiful. 



There is much else of interest in The 

 Delineator; a publication that safely claims 

 for itself that there is no magazine publish- 

 ed that can meet the needs of all women 

 at so many points 



SCRRIBNER'S. 



Henry Norman, M. P. resumes his ar- 

 ticle in the June Scribner's. The origin 

 and traditions of the Scotch universities 

 are little known in this country, and will 

 be described by Prof. John Grier Hibben, 

 ofPrinceton, who visited them a year ago. 

 Mrs. Kate Douglas Wiggin's amusing 

 seriel, "The Diary of a Goose Girl," is 

 continued. Ernest Seth-Thompson will 

 begin another of his animal biographies 

 the hero this time being a mountain sheep 

 known as "Krag the Kootenay Ham." 

 Walter A. Wyckoff, the author of ''The 

 Workers," onced worked on the Union 

 Pacific .Railroad as a section hand, and he 

 will describe the incidents of that exper- 

 ience. 



MCCLQRE'S. 



Mrs. Elizabeth Stuart Phelp^'s drain i 

 ''Within the Gates," begun ia McClure, s 

 Magazine for May, is continued in the 

 June number. Josiah Flynt contributes 

 a new ''World of Graft" article called 

 "Boston, a Plain-Clothes vlan's Town." 

 In 'The King's Gold," Robert Barr relates 

 more of the incognito rambles of King 

 James V. of Scotland, in the highways and 

 byways of his Capital. An article by that 

 clever essayist, E. S. Martin, entitled 

 "Women" which is handsomely embel- 

 lished with numerous half-tone engravings 

 from celebrated portraits of beautiful wo- 

 men of former times. The author of ''The 

 Women and her Bonds" Mr. Lefevre, con- 

 tributes another Wall Street story. An 

 exceedingly important discovery, is made 

 public for the first time in an article cal- 

 led "Geology and the Deluge," by Prof. 

 Fredrick G. Wright, of Oberlin College. 



